The Denver Metro Chamber of Commerce is working hard to convince Miller Brewing Co. and Molson Coors Brewing Co. executives to locate their combined headquarters in Colorado, rather than Milwaukee.
Denverโs effort received a huge a boost from a rather strange place Thursday: from Milwaukeeโs business community.
Five of the Milwaukee areaโs most prominent chief executive officers were featured in a panel discussion on "Global Wooing" Thursday by the Public Policy Forum. The five CEOs took turns ripping Milwaukee as a terrible place to do business.
The CEOs jointly described Milwaukee as a region with a broken public education system, runaway health care costs and an anti-capitalistic mindset. They said Milwaukeeโs taxes are too high, and the region doesnโt know how to market itself, suffers from a lack of leadership, has wasteful government spending and doesnโt provide enough tax incentives to attract and keep businesses and create jobs.
And when they were done criticizing the region as a terrible place to do business, they piled on and did it again. And again.
Paul Purcell, CEO of Robert W. Baird & Co. Inc., criticized Milwaukee Public Schools and called for more charter schools and choice schools. "We need to fix MPS," he said.
Purcell also denounced Wisconsinโs "bureaucracy and tax structure."
John Shiely, CEO of Briggs & Stratton Inc., was asked if he would consider building a new manufacturing plant here.
"We probably wouldnโt, to tell you the truth," Shiely said.
Shiely criticized the collective mindset of Milwaukee, saying the region is more likely to have a great-grandson of "one of Milwaukeeโs socialist mayors" denounce the gap in salaries between CEOs and front-line workers than it is to encourage the creation of wealth.
"That shouldnโt be โฆ You just donโt hear the โtwo Americasโ rhetoric (down South)," Shiely said.
Rick Armbrust, CEO of Oilgear Co., said he is warmly welcomed and embraced by Chinese government officials when he visits that country.
"Come to Milwaukee โฆ And you donโt find that," Armbrust said.
Likewise, Tim Sullivan, CEO of Bucyrus International Inc., said he was courted by local governmental officials when he visited Idaho and Texas to consider plant expansions there. By contrast, in Milwaukee, "It was like bouncing off the walls trying to get someone to talk to โฆ We donโt do anything other states do. We have to emulate these other states to try to attract and keep companies."
Jeff Joerres, CEO of Manpower Inc., said, "Weโre not breaking rules to say, โCome here.โ"
Purcell said his company has difficulty persuading top young talent to come to Milwaukee, where employers increasingly are facing the additional challenge of finding employment for the spouses of job candidates.
"In Chicago, they have 15 opportunities, and in Milwaukee, they have one," Purcell said.
Purcell said Milwaukee should stop trying to compete with Chicago and should instead collaborate more with the Windy City and Madison.
Purcell drew applause from the crowd of more than 200 business and civic leaders when he said southeastern Wisconsin needs high-speed rail to be more competitive.
Joerres said the region needs to do a more effective job of promoting its image to the" 25-year-olds" in other markets.
"In many ways, weโre not known for much โฆ What if you put in light rail?" Joerres said. "I think as a city, weโve got to get out in front."
Joerres read aloud a national news story about a company that moved its headquarters to North Carolina.
Shiely, who said Milwaukee has a bad "tone," told a story about the cheaper labor his company finds for its plant in Kentucky.
When asked about the need for taxes to support quality-of-life initiatives, such as public parks, Sullivan said local governments were inefficient and duplicative.
"We are squandering millions of (dollars) of federal money," Sullivan said.
Meanwhile, the folks at the Milwaukee 7, the Metropolitan Milwaukee Association of Commerce and the Spirit of Milwaukee are doing all they can to try convince companies such as Miller/Molson Coors to put their headquarters in Milwaukee.
Good luck with that, now.
Dean Amhaus, president of Spirit Milwaukee, attended the Public Policy Luncheon and listened to the CEOsโ comments.
"Do we have things we need to address and grow and change? Absolutely. Thatโs why Milwaukee 7 was created, to address that. One of the first things was to get us all on the same page, so when someone did call us, they didnโt have 35 phone numbers to call. Milwaukee 7 has only been around two years. Places like North Carolina have been doing this for decades. The other thing is places like North Carolina use a huge amount of government dollars to do that. Ours is mostly privately driven," Amhaus told SBT after the forum. "We are our own worst enemy. We have to move past the glass is half empty to the glass is half full, and I think weโve made significant progress. We will continue to keep championing the positives. Time in and time out, we have people come to the Milwaukee region, and they are amazed to see what we have got going on here, and they are quick to sing our praises."
The forum also was attended by Jeff Sherman, president of OnMilwaukee.com, which is one of the strongest voices of advocacy for the region. After the event, Sherman called for a more positive dialog among its corporate leaders.
"We heard many valid โcriticismsโ today, but we are tired of hearing CEOs complain about the โbad toneโ in Milwaukee," Sherman said. "Letโs tell the positive Milwaukee stories and dive in to address the negatives."
Steve Jagler is executive editor of Small Business Times.